I'm surprised this doesn't happen more often - how many (televised) professional matches have ended in a deciding frame on the very last black, with that ball being necessary for victory (as opposed to simply completing the clearance)? This would include any situation in which the black was respotted with the scores even after clearance.
The most famous example of this would be the 1985 World Championship final, but a couple of others come to mind as well:
- Mike Hallett's epic final frame against John Parrott in the 1988 Masters semifinal, where he came back from four snookers required to clear it all, needing that final black to take the lead in the frame for the first and only time. Not quite as dramatic as the former or latter examples, but it does fit the criteria and was one hell of a fightback.
- Mark Williams's conquest of Stephen Hendry in the 1998 Masters, where he came back from 9-6 down in the match, and 56-34 down in the last frame, to force the black-ball tiebreak.
- Kinda like Hallett's, John Higgins's win in the 2006 Masters also qualifies, coming back with a 64 clearance after a break of 60 by the Rocket.
The most famous example of this would be the 1985 World Championship final, but a couple of others come to mind as well:
- Mike Hallett's epic final frame against John Parrott in the 1988 Masters semifinal, where he came back from four snookers required to clear it all, needing that final black to take the lead in the frame for the first and only time. Not quite as dramatic as the former or latter examples, but it does fit the criteria and was one hell of a fightback.
- Mark Williams's conquest of Stephen Hendry in the 1998 Masters, where he came back from 9-6 down in the match, and 56-34 down in the last frame, to force the black-ball tiebreak.
- Kinda like Hallett's, John Higgins's win in the 2006 Masters also qualifies, coming back with a 64 clearance after a break of 60 by the Rocket.
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